The Mercury News

Reddick has a hand in leading Astros to 9-4 win over A’s

Reddick hurts old team with great catch in 8th to save two runs

- By John Hickey jhickey@bayareanew­sgroup.com Follow John Hickey at twitter.com/JHickey3.

HOUSTON — Josh Reddick had a way of stealing the spotlight when he played for the A’s, and he did it again Friday as a member of the Astros in helping hand Oakland its fifth straight loss, 9-4.

Reddick took part in three Houston rallies, two of them because he joined the rare club of seven men who have reached base on catcher’s interferen­ce twice in the same game. And he came up with a catch against Ryon Healy that saved two runs.

So on a night when one might reasonably deduce that Khris Davis’ American League-leading eighth and ninth homers would command center stage, Reddick stole the show.

“I do it every now and then, but I’ve never even heard of someone doing it twice in one game,” Reddick said of the catcher’s interferen­ce calls. The first one was the most damaging for the A’s, extending as it did what would have been a shutout inning for starter Jharel Cotton with the A’s up 3-0 and transformi­ng it somehow into a three-run Astros rally.

The A’s credited the interferen­ce calls to Reddick, someone who already has a long swing, making it even longer by trying to drive the ball to left field. Reddick wasn’t so sure.

“I don’t feel like I’m going back on the ball. I feel like my swing is right where I need it to be,” Reddick said “Maybe he’s (A’s catcher Stephen Vogt) coming up too much, or I’m letting it get too deep. It’s surprising, but I’ll take it. I’ll take it any time I can get on base.”

Vogt said “it’s on me” when talking about the interferen­ce calls and said the A’s needed to do a better job playing behind Cotton. At the same time, the veteran catcher didn’t seem to be 100 percent clear on what he needed to do differentl­y.

“Typically, I’m pretty far back,” Vogt said. “Reddick has a pretty long swing when he’s trying to go the other way. There are only two people who have ever gotten me, Jacoby Ellsbury and Josh Reddick. So I’m pretty far back.

“It’s one of those freak things that obviously I’m not real thrilled about. It’s the perfect storm of pitch location and him having a long swing when he’s going the other way. That’s on me. I’ve got to make sure I’m far enough back and not reaching for the ball.”

A game like Friday is far too broad to sit on one man’s shoulders. The A’s struck out a season-high 14 times. They made three errors, two on Vogt for the interferen­ce calls and another on second baseman Jed Lowrie that brought his 75game errorless streak to an end and enabled the Astros to score two unearned runs in the fifth. Cotton chipped in with a balk. Davis’ first homer was the only hit with a man in scoring position.

It’s a pattern that is not new.

In their last 14 games the A’s have lost four in a row, won five in a row and now lost five in succession. Those results leave Oakland six games out of first place in the American League West with a 10-13 record. The A’s didn’t get that far out of first last season until May 10.

“When we went through the winning streak, we played real clean games,” manager Bob Melvin. “And now we’re a little shoddy. There’s a psychologi­cal play that goes with that. When you’re not making the plays at times, and you are giving extra outs, it makes it tough on the pitchers, and it’s tough mentally sometimes when you aren’t playing clean games.

“When you are playing clean games, it seems like you’re in and out, and you are better in synch.”

Davis hit a three-run shot in the first inning, and after that lead evaporated, he broke a 3-all tie with a solo homer in the third. The A’s would only get two more hits against Astros starter Charlie Morton, who struck out a careerhigh 12 batters in seven innings.

Vogt threw out Alex n Bregman on a steal try as part of an Astros’ hit-andrun attempt in the fourth inning. It was the first time Vogt had thrown out a runner successful­ly after 12 steals against him.

It was the first two-error n game of Vogt’s career.

Reddick’s big catch n saw him race to the warning track against Healy with two out and two on in the eighth. The A’s were down three runs at that point. Once the ball settled in Reddick’s glove to end the inning, the A’s wouldn’t get another chance.

Sean Manaea will n almost certainly miss his next start after coming up with shoulder tightness in his start Tuesday and lasting just two innings against the Angels. Manaea threw on the side before Friday’s game, but Melvin said he didn’t see how Manaea could make it back to health in time for a Tuesday start. The manager said the team was contemplat­ing whether to put Manaea on the disabled list.

That being the case, n Sonny Gray will come off the disabled list and make that start Tuesday in Minneapoli­s against the Twins. It will be his first start of the season after having spent much of the past two months recovering from a right shoulder strain. “I feel great,” Gray said after rejoining the club Friday afternoon.

 ?? BOB LEVEY/GETTY IMAGES ?? The A’s Jaff Decker makes a diving catch in the eighth inning Friday against the Astros
BOB LEVEY/GETTY IMAGES The A’s Jaff Decker makes a diving catch in the eighth inning Friday against the Astros

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